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anaheim-gazette 1937-09-02

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Anaheim, Calif., Sept. 2, 1937 SOCIETY CLUBS Helen Holcomb Honors House Guest with Bridge Party Miss Helen Holcomb was hostess last Thursday evening at her home on West Center street at an informal bridge party given in honor of her house guest, Miss Marie Tomlinson of Moberly, Mo. Assisting as hostess was Miss Evelyn Durfee. Mrs. Ellis Porter and Mrs. Jess Rankin were awarded prizes for high scores in the bridge game. Guests were Miss Ruth Betz, house guest of Mrs. Rankin, Miss Dolores Menan, Miss Margaret Menan, Miss Elvira Heinz, Miss Rose Bushman, all of Anaheim, and Mrs. Max Omey of Santa Ana. Anaheim Residents Return Sunday from Vacation Trip Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Seutt and their son, Gerald, returned Sunday from a two-weeks automobile trip into the northwest and Canada. The party left here August 15. En route north over the Redwood highway and along the Columbia river they stopped in Oregon to visit Mr. and Mrs. Ed Presnell, former residents of Anaheim. They continued on to Seattle and into Vancouver. In the latter city they visited with Bill Wright, former Anaheim Family Reunion Marks Anniversary of W. P. Webb, Sr. The 81st birthday anniversary of William P. Webb, Sr., of 131 S. Philadelphia street, was commemorated last Sunday with a family reunion held at the Anaheim city park. The event was planned by Mrs. Webb. Relatives and close friends were invited. The honored guest has resided in this city for the past 37 years, formerly engaging in paint contracting. He and his wife are the parents of four sons and two daughters, all of whom reside in Anaheim. Those attending the reunion were Mr. and Mrs. William P. short sidelips, including one to and Mary, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Webb and sons, Tommy and Jimmy, Mr. and Mrs. Darroll Webb and son, Lee, Mr. and Mrs. La-Mont Webb and daughters, Elaine and Irene, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Shafer, Mrs. Blanche Shafer and daughter, Juliana, George Frisbee, John Beat, William Bond, Mrs. Emma Liderman, all of Anaheim; Mrs. Carrie Foster, Mrs. Dinah McLaughlin and Mr. and Mrs. Lant McLaughlin and family of Whittier. Honor Easton is Bride of Eule T. Webster The All Saints Episcopal church in Carmel was the setting of the marriage of Miss Honor Easton, daughter of Mrs. Honor Easton of Harbor boulevard, Anaheim, to Eule T. Webster of Los Angeles, Monday noon. Dr. Thomas Heath, rector of Trinity church, Buffalo, N.Y., and nephew of Mrs. Easton, performed the ceremony which was attended by only the immediate families. The new Mrs. Webster is a graduate of Anaheim union high school and the University of California. She is an architect. The bridegroom is also an architect with offices in Los Angeles. He was graduated from the University of Texas. Following the wedding trip to an unannounced destination Mr. and Mrs. Webster will be at home at 5111 Harold way, Los Angeles. Mrs. Cora Wents is Honored at Birthday Party Mrs. Dora Wents of North Lemon street was honored recently on her 86th birthday anniversary at a party given at the Pacific Coast club of Long Beach by her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Linda Wents of Los Angeles. and Mrs. A. B. Scutt and their son, Gerald, returned Sunday from a two-weeks automobile trip into the northwest and Canada. The party left here August 15. En route north over the Redwood highway and along the Columbia river they stopped in Oregon to visit Mr. and Mrs. Ed Presnell, former residents of Anaheim. They continued on to Seattle and into Vancouver. In the latter city they visited with Bill Wright, former Anaheim lumberman who is now making his home in the Canadian city. Enroute home they took several Webb, Jr., and daughters, Joan the Oregon caves. Anaheim Woman Entertains for Sister, Fiance Complimenting her sister, Miss Marian Powell, and the latter's fiance, Paul Wright, Mrs. Oswald C. Ulrich of 846 N. Zeyn street, entertained with a surprise shower at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Powell of Orange. Prizes in games played during the evening were awarded to Mrs. Otto Ulrich and I. A. Wright. After the games refreshments were served. Guests included Mr. and Mrs. I. A. Wright, Mr. and Mrs. F. Townsend, Mr. and Mrs. D. Wayne Wright, I. A. Wright, Jr., and Paul Wright of Santa Ana, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Ulrich, Mrs. Clara Dauss, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Powell. L. W. BLODGET and THOMAS H. KUCHEL Attorneys at Law 410-11 Bank of America Bldg., Anaheim Phone 2523 LAST TIMES SATURDAY Sun. Doors Open 1:45 Sun.-Mon.-Tues. Continuous From 2 p.m. WED.-THURS.-FRI.-SAT. Mrs. Cora Wents is Honored at Birthday Party Mrs. Dora Wents of North Lemon street was honored recently on her 86th birthday anniversary at a party given at the Pacific Coast club of Long Beach by her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Wents of Los Angeles. Other guests were Judge and Mrs. Homer Ames, Messrs. and Mesdames J. H. Wents, Jr., Gene Phillips, George C. Wents, Leslie Potter, Maynard Rosenburger, Samuel P/Kraemer, Miss Mary Shearman, Rosemary Kraemer, Erlinda Wents, Edwards Wents and Billy Phillips. CURC Using Simple Form for Reports New and simplified procedure in reporting monthly contributions to the unemployment trust fund was adopted recently by the California unemployment reserves commission. The commission, acting to save employers of California thousands of dollars monthly, revoked its reporting form known as CURC 3, which called for as high as 114 separate figures, and substituted one calling for only 15. ell and Tom Powell of Orange; Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Ulrich, and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Busch of Anaheim. At New Anaheim Sun. Doors Open 1:45 Sun. - Mon. - Tues. Continuous From 2 p.m. GARY BORNE IN A WORLD GONE BARIT LOVE UNDER FIRE DON SWECHEL JEREMIA YOUNG BORIS KARLOFF NIGHT KEY — WED. - THURS. - FRI. - SAT. GARY COOPER GEORGE RAFT SOULS AT SEA WINE WOMEN AND HORSES Barton MacLANE Ann Sheridan All Seats 30¢ Children 10¢ ANAHEIM THEATRE Cool Beautiful Comfortable Now Playing—Sun. - Mon. Continuous HE'S NOT CRAZY HE'S... Jack BENNY "ARTISTS MODELS" Jim LUPINO Richard ARLEN GAIL PATRICK PLUS SECOND HIT "The Lady Escapes" MICHAEL WHALEN - GLORIA STUART COMING WEDNESDAY FOR ONE WEEK—ROBERT TAYLOR - ELEANOR POWELL "BROADWAY MELODY OF 1938" PLUS "THINK FAST, MR. MOTO" with PETER LORRE EASTON of Miss Honor Easton, of Mrs. Honor Easton of Bulevard, Anaheim, to Webster of Los Angeles, son. Thomas Heath, rector of March, Buffalo, N. Y., and Mrs. Easton, performed only which was attendy the immediate famly of Mrs. Webster is a of Anaheim union high the University of Calihe is an architect. Groom is also an archchoices in Los Angeles. Graduated from the UniTexas. The wedding trip to conceded destination Mr. Webster will be at home old way, Los Angeles. Brief Highlights of California History By ROY W. CLOUD, State Executive Secretary, California Teachers Association. Editor's Note: Roy W. Cloud, who has written these "Brief Highlights of California History," of timely interest in view of Admission Day, September 9, is the author of "Trails of yesterday," a narrative of early California days, and of "The History of San Mateo County." He is an authority on California history and was formerly historian of the Grand Parlor, Native Sons of the Golden West. THE SPANISH ERA Under Spanish control, colonization work was carried on in California by the pioneer padres as Mission founders. The greatest of this line was the Franciscan, Junipero Serra, who came to California in 1769, landing at San Diego. He labored here for 16 years in his epocal work of Mission building and died at Mission Carmel, August 28, 1784, at the age of 70. Prior to the Franciscans, the Jesuit order had begun Mission founding in lower California. ASTONISHING SESSION—WASHINGTON — "Before the adjournment of congress, will you be good enough to extend to the senate my regards and good wishes? I hope that during the coming months all of you will have a happy vacation." After hearing this little note from the president, unusual in that it pointedly omitted to thank the senate for its services, that body moved to adjourn. Twenty-eight minutes later the house likewise closed up and the 75th congress' astonishing 229-day first session was over. When the 75th congress met last January it looked like one of the most efficient legislative machines in U.S. history. A huge Democratic majority in both houses was apparently waiting to do the president's bidding. Last week it had indeed proved efficient but in ways no one had anticipated. Far from churning out a record quantity of important legislation, it had turned out almost none. Far from advancing the president's program, it had all but stopped it in its tracks. Casting up the balance, political observers unanimously agreed that what ever congress had done in 1937, what it had not done was infinitely more important, so important that some believed the president would call a special session in the fall. Major congressional work undone; a bill to limit crop production, produce an "ever-normal" reorganize the administration branch of the government, carry two new cabinet departments, the president six special assistants, a regional conservation bill calling out the U.S. among "s.T. V. A.s."). Major congressional work on a quasi-Neutrality act, extend and amending the temporary of 1935 and 1936; an act to a supreme court justices to retitl full pay; a modified court which was the ghost of the president's plan to enlarge the super court; the tax loophole bill decided to stop tax avoidance through personal holding schemes, the Waginer-Steagall—for slum clearance in U.S. or a low-cost housing program run by the department of the interior, paid for by a federal issue; the Jones sugar bill, finitely restricting imports on fined sugar from Puerto Rico Hawaii, which faced a sure veil. Also rushed through for president's signature were bills permit peace-time exportation; provide for an uneem ment census by voluntary lea tion; alter methods of collect Panama canal tolls; make law or burglary of national bank federal offence. Final item o 1937 total appropriations $9,400,000,000 ($1,290,000,000 than in 1936) was last w third deficiency bill of $87,622 Passage of the bill include victory for the house liberal headed by noisy Maury May Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthly, revoked its reform known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs. O. C. Ulrich; and Mrs. Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Wents of North Lemong Beach by her son ighter-in-law, Mr. and Wents of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs. and J. H. Wents, Jr., Gene George C. Wents, Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer, Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Wents, Edwards Wents Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthly, revoked its reform known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs. O. C. Ulrich; and Mrs. Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Wents of North Lemong Beach by her son ighter-in-law, Mr. and Wents of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs. and J. H. Wents, Jr., Gene George C. Wents, Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer, Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Wents, Edwards Wents Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthly, revoked its reform known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs. O. C. Ulrich; and Mrs. Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Wents of North Lemong Beach by her son ighter-in-law, Mr. and Wents of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs. and J. H. Wents, Jr., Gene George C. Wents, Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer, Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Wents, Edwards Wents Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthly, revoked its reform known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs. O. C. Ulrich; and Mrs. Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Wents of North Lemong Beach by her son ighter-in-law, Mr. and Wents of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs. and J. H. Wents, Jr., Gene George C. Wents, Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer, Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Wents, Edwards Wents Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthly, revoked its reform known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs. O. C. Ulrich; and Mrs. Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Wents of North Lemong Beach by her son ighter-in-law, Mr. and Wents of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs. and J. H. Wents, Jr., Gene George C. Wents, Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer, Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Wents, Edwards Wente Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthly, revoked its reform known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs. O. C. Ulrich; and Mrs. Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Wents of North Lemong Beach by her son ighter-in-law, Mr. and Wents of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs. and J. H. Wents, Jr., Gene George C. Wents, Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer, Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Wents, Edwards Wente Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthly, revoked its reform known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs. O. C. Ulrich; and Mrs. Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Wents of North Lemong Beach by her son ighter-in-law, Mr. and Wents of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs. and J. H. Wents, Jr., Gene George C. Wents, Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer, Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Wents, Edwards Wente Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthsly, revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs. O. C. Ulrich; and Mrs. Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Wents of North Lemong Beach by her son ighter-in-law, Mr. and Wents of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs. and J. H. Wents, Jr., Gene George C. Wents, Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer, Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Wents, Edwards Wente Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthsly, revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs. O. C. Ulrich; and Mrs. Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law, Mr. and Went's of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs. and J. H. Went's Jr., Gene George C. Went's Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer, Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Went's Edwards Went's Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthsly, revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs. O. C. Ulrich; and Mrs. Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law, Mr. and Went's of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs. and J. H. Went's Jr., Gene George C. Went's Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer, Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Went's Edwards Went's Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthsly, revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs. O.C.Ulrich; and Mrs.Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law, Mr. and Went's of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs. and J. H.Went's Jr., Gene George C.Went's Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer,Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Went's Edwards Went's Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthsly, revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs.O.C.Ulrich; and Mrs.Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law, Mr. and Went's of Los Angeles. Guests were Judge and other Ames, Messrs.J.H.Went's Jr., Gene George C.Went's Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer,Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Went's Edwards Went's Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission, acting to save of California thousands monthsly, revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures, and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs.O.C.Ulrich; and Mrs.Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law,Mr。andWent'sofLosAngeles. Guests were Judge和otherAmes,Messrs.J.H.Went's Jr., Gene George C.Went's Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer,Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Went's Edwards Went's Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission,acting to save of California thousands monthsly,revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures,and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs.O.C.Ulrich;and Mrs.Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law,Mr。andWent'sofLosAngeles. Guests were Judge和otherAmes,Messrs.J.H.Went's Jr., Gene George C.Went's Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer,Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Went's Edwards Went's Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission,acting to save of California thousands monthsly,revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures,and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs.O.C.Ulrich;and Mrs.Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law,Mr。andWent'SofLosAngles. Guests were Judge和otherAmes,Messrs.J.H.Went's Jr., Gene George C.Went'S Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer,Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Went's Edwards Went's Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission,acting to save of California thousands monthsly,revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures,and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs.O.C.Ulrich;and Mrs.Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law,Mr。andWent'SofLosAngles. Guests were Judge和otherAmes,Messrs.J.H.Went's Jr., Gene George C.Went'S Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer,Miss Mary Rosemary Kraemer, Went's Edwards Went's Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission,acting to save of California thousands monthsly,revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures,and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs.O.C.Ulrich;and Mrs.Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law,Mr。andWent'SofLosAngles. Guests were Judge和otherAmes,Messrs.J.H.Went's Jr., Gene George C.Went'S Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, Kraemer,Miss Mary Rosemary KraEMER, Went's Edwards WENT'S Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission,acting to save of California thousands monthsly,revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures,and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs.O.C.Ulrich;and Mrs.Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law,Mr。andWent'SofLosAngles. Guests were Judge和otherAmes,Messrs.J.H.Went's Jr., Gene George C.Went'S Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, KraEmER,Miss Mary Rosesmary KrasEmER, Went's Edwards WEnt'S Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission,acting to save of California thousands monthsly,revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures,and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs.O.C.Ulrich;and Mrs.Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law,Mr。andWent'SofLosAngles. Guests were Judge和otherAmes,Messrs.J.H.Went's Jr., Gene George C.Went'S Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, KrasEmER,Miss Mary Rosesmary KrasEmER, Went's Edwards WEnt'S Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission,acting to save of California thousands monthsly,revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures,and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs.O.C.Ulrich;and Mrs.Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law,Mr。andWen'tSofLosAngles. Guests were Judge和otherAmes,Messrs.J.H.W恩'S Jr., Gene George C.W恩'S Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, KrasEmER,Miss Mary Rosesmary KrasEmER, Went's Edwards WEnt'S Phillips. Using Simple Form for Reports and simplified procedure in monthly contributions employment trust fund received recently by the Cali-employment reserves. Commission,acting to save of California thousands monthsly,revoked its re-form known as CURC 3, led for as high as 114 figures,and substituted for only 15. Tom Powell of Orange; Mrs.O.C.Ulrich;and Mrs.Ray Busch of New Anaheim Ora Went's honored recently on birthday anniversary at seven at the Pacific Coast long Beach by her sonighter-in-law,Mr。andWen'tSofLosAngles. Guests were Judge和otherAmes,Messrs.J.H.W恩'S Jr., Gene George C.W恩'S Leslie Maynard Rosenburger, KrasEmER,Miss Mary Rosesmary KrasEmER, Went's Edwards WEnt'S Phillips. No NEED TO SPEED IF YOU TELEPHONE AHEAD 1769, resulted when Portola's overland expedition from San Diego, searching for Monterey bay, missed Monterey entirely. Portola finally sighting the harbor now called San Francisco bay, and so named by Father Serra in honor of his patron saint, St. Francis. The first ship ever to sail through the Golden Gate into San Francisco bay was the San Carlos, commanded by the Spanish captain, Juan de Ayala, August 5, nor of California, at Monterey, 1775. With Portola as the first governor with the establishment there of Junipero Serra as father president of the missions, Monterey became the seat of both civil and Coming to Fox Anaheim Sheridan and Barton MacLane in "Wine, Women and Are coming to the Fox Anaheim theater September 8, 9, 10 Also to be shown is "Souls at Sea." For your Picnic Save at PIONEE NO NEED TO SPEED IF YOU TELEPHONE AHEAD TWO HOLIDAYS in September! If you are going somewhere, telephone ahead. Make sure of pleasant accommodations. Avoid disappointment. Avoid having to speed! A telephone call will safeguard your peace of mind and let you travel in leisure. Just Call BUSINESS OFFICE 217 N. LEMON ST., ANAHEIM Anaheim 2101 ANIZE the administrative bath of the government, create new cabinet departments, give president six special assistants; national conservation bill (parg out the U. S. among "seven As"). Major congressional work done: asi-Neutrality act, extending amending the temporary acts 1935 and 1936; an act to allow court justices to retire on pay; a modified court bill, it was the ghost of the presision plan to enlarge the supreme tax loophole bill designstop tax avoidance through normal holding companies, the Waginer-Steagall bill slum clearance in U. S. cities, cost housing program to be by the department of the inter, paid for by a federal bond; the Jones sugar bill, indely restricting imports of resugar from Puerto Rico and 台湾, which faced a sure veto. So rushed through for the indent's signature were bills to: mit peace-time exports of film; provide for an unemployment census by voluntary legislatler methods of collecting ma canal tolls; make larceny burglary of national banks a real offence. Final item of the total appropriations of $0,000,000 ($1,290,000,000 more in 1936) was last week's deficiency bill of $87,622,624. Page of the bill included a array for the house liberal bloc by noisy Maury Maverick. enth day of the battle a huge naval shell burst above the street between two crammed department stores in the Settlement, mutilating and killing over 300. Wrote AP Correspondent Morris J. Harris: "Hundreds of bodies lay in piles... pools of blood glistened in the street-car tracks and gutters. Fragments of heads, legs and arms plastered building fronts. Some were scattered in the street two blocks away." Meanwhile, with both sides hog-wild, the battle became a major engagement involving approximately 100,000 Chinese and 60,000 Japanese troops, with the Japanese fleet of 50 vessels swollen this week to 82, not counting scores of transports arriving almost hourly at the mouth of the Yangtze river. There was good reason to believe last week that it was no part of the original Japanese plan to become involved in this desperate Shanghai struggle. Their original land-grabbing intentions were confined to the Peiping area (where comparative quiet reigned last week) and they had every reason not to waste ammunition and men in Shanghai. Whether the navy's Shanghai move was a blunder, or whether Japan's demands were a bluff which China called, the result was a war big enough to endanger Japan's precarious economic structure. For the longer the war lasts, the greater will be Chinese defeats, but the greater also danger of economic collapse in Japan. While China's Finance Minister H. H. Kung trotted happily about Vienna last week, Japanese financiers were desperately ordering finishing steel and beginning to ship abroad quantities of Japan's small gold store and Japan hands dropped from 90 to trade, grossing an estimated $200,-000,000 a year or about as much as the "pop" business. But soft-drinks make money, while the merchant marine operates at a tremendous and apparently perpetual loss. This neglected industry received last week such attention as it has long deserved when Fortune published a whole issue devoted to one subject—U. S. Shipping—and offered the first thorough investigation of "an entirely new principle which has been injected into Ut S. business on a gigantic scale... the principle of direct subsidy." That foreign trade is a losing game is the shipping man's plaint the world around, and added to the worldwide burden of 1) too many ships 2) tariffs and depressions 3) fluctuating profitable trade routes. U. S. shipping men face the complication that U. S. wages are higher, ships cost more to build and operate than foreign bottoms. Astraddle this depressing situation, which the government has finally recognized after years of such temporizing as mail subsidies, sits ruddy Maritime Commission Chairman Joseph P. Kennedy, one-time SEC chairman. Said Fortune of Chairman Kennedy: "With ours-not-to-reason-why-ours-but-to-do-or-die attitude he is out to put American ships on the world's trade routes. If the shipping companies, with government nursing, can handle the job honestly and efficiently, well" and good. If not, the commission is damn well going to show them how..." PEACE-TIME EXPORTS OF ITEM 1: Provide for an unemployed census by voluntary legislation; alter methods of collecting ama canal tolls; make larceny burglary of national banks a central offence. Final item of the total appropriations of $100,000,000 ($1,290,000,000 more in 1936) was last week's deficiency bill of $87,622,634. The bill included aury for the house liberal blooced by noisy Maury Maverick, wanted $20,000,000 for an experimental government farm tenancy program, $1,800,000 for the national Labor Relations board, and both. NESE PUZZLE—Around the International Settlement built on a ramp adjoining ancient Shangtown there has grown the sixth best city of the world, a Chinese town of nearly 4,000,000 souls. Just outside the city at Hungjao airline early this month two Japanese sailors were reported murdered, whereupon Japanese Admiral Hasegawa demanded integrity and the withdrawal of these troops to a distance of 20 miles from the Settlement. When these objected to being ordered to their own country, Japanese ships piled ashore to reinforce garrison and the fighting began. Last week the Japanese navy, the conservative, restraining agent in Nippon's war politics, fighting in Shanghai one of greatest battles since the world war and fighting it almost alone, held in check for a time by U.S. Navy and British diplomacy, the situation exploded to the world's front pages fortnight ago when two bombs, intended for the Japanese flagship "Idumo" moored Shanghai's Bund, plunked into Palace hotel and the Great Old Amusement palace, a mile away, snuffing out 600 lives. Elevated peace-time exports of itum provide for an unemployable census by voluntary legislature; alter methods of collecting ama canal tolls; make larceny burglary of national banks a central offence. Final item of the total appropriations of $100,000,000 ($1,290,000,000 more in 1936) was last week's deficiency bill of $87,622,634. The bill included aury for the house liberal blooced by noisy Maury Maverick, wanted $20,000,000 for an experimental government farm tenancy program, $1,800,000 for the national Labor Relations board, and both. DOWN TO THE SEA—NEW YORK—The U.S. Merchant marine, comprising 3,475 ships or about a tenth of the world's vessels, can best be defined as the ricketiest collection of tubs owned by any important nation—85% over 17 years old, carrying less than 40% of U.S. Foreign Trade to the Sea— NOCTURNAL ROUND—MAYSVILLE, Ky.—As an almost full moon sailed over Maysville one evening last week, Verl Stinchcomb, Maysville Country club professional, started out to play nine holes of nocturnal golf. Since the flight of a golf ball cannot be followed even in full moonlight, Golfer Stinchcomb had to keep his shots straight down the fairway in order to find his ball. He made a birdie and an eagle, lost no balls, finished with a nine-hole score of 35, one under par. W. M. 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